Following the official announcement of the new GM204 Maxwell based Geforce GTX 980 and the Geforce GTX 970 graphics cards, EVGA has unveiled a total of 15 different versions of these graphics cards, with old ACX or the new ACX 2.0 cooler and various clock settings.

With the launch of the new Geforce GTX 980 and GTX 970 graphics cards, EVGA decided to introduce the new version of its well known ACX cooler, the ACX 2.0. According to EVGA, most manufacturers only focus on one aspect when designing a new cooler, hence they neglect other aspects of fan and heatsink design , something that EVGA wanted to change with their new ACX 2.0 cooler.

According to EVGA, the power consumption of a fan can affect the overclocking ability of the entire graphics cards due to maximum power ceiling that also takes the fan power consumption into account, thus EVGA completely redesigned the motor to reduce noise, increased the fan blade count to create higher pressure, all without needing to increase the motor speed and noise levels, something that makes it the best complete cooling solution on the market.

The fans on the new ACX 2.0 cooler now features eleven fan blades and feature Swept Fan Design that should reduce fan noise levels while the motor has improved magnets that allow 150RPM increase, 3phase/6slot design that improves efficiency and increased silicon steel which give more strength to magnets. According to EVGA, all of this was enough to get up to 36 percent quieter graphics card with 26 lower GPU temperature as well as 250 percent lower fan power consumption and 400 percent longer lifespan.

As far as the EVGA GTX 980 and GTX 970 lineup is concerned, EVGA has announced a total of 15 different models, some with older ACX, some with the new ACX 2.0 cooler as well as the famous GTX 980 Hydro Copper version that comes with a full cover EK Water Blocks water block.

EVGA's lineup starts with a total of eight different Geforce GTX 980 graphics cards, including the reference designed GTX 980, clocked at 1126/1216MHz for base/Boost GPU clocks and 4GB of GDDR5 memory clocked at reference 7010MHz, as well as a Superclocked version of the reference GTX 980 working at 1241/1342MHz and 7010MHz for the memory.

Next in line are four EVGA GTX 980 graphics cards that will feature the new ACX 2.0 cooler, including the EVGA Geforce GTX 980 ACX 2.0, Superclocked ACX 2.0, FTW ACX 2.0 and the Geforce GTX 980 Classified ACX 2.0.

The clocks range from reference on the plain GTX 980 ACX 2.0 up to 1291/1405MHz for GPU base/Boost clocks on the EVGA GTX 980 Classified ACX 2.0 graphics card. EVGA has decided to leave the 4GB of GDDR5 memory, paired up with a 256-bit memory interface, on reference 7010MHz clock on all versions.

Unfortunately, the EVGA GTX 980 Hydro Copper is yet to be details and we are surely looking forward to see how far will EVGA be able to push that factory-overclock on the GTX 980.

The Geforce GTX 970 lineup is quite similar and starts with three rather plain Geforce GTX 970 graphics cards, the EVGA GTX 970 with older EVGA blower style fan and reference 1050MHz base and 1178MHz GPU Boost clocks and the EVGA GTX 970 Superclocked with the same fan but higher 1140/1279MHz GPU clocks. It continues with the EVGA GTX 970 ACX, which has reference clocks and older ACX cooler, the EVGA GTX 970 Superclocked ACX, with old ACX cooler and 1165/1317MHz GPU clocks as well as the non-overclocked EVGA GTX 970 ACX 2.0 with the new ACX cooler.

The Superclocked version works at the same 1165/1317MHz GPU base and Boost clocks, the SSC ACX 2.0 works at 1190/1342MHz for GPU base and GPU Boost clocks, while the EVGA GTX 970 FTW ACX 2.0 works at 1216MHz base and 1367MHz GPU Boost clocks.

Some versions of the EVGA GTX 980 and GTX 970 graphics cards, including Classified, FTW and SSC versions, come with certain extra features like the Triple or Double BIOS and 1.215v+ voltage boost (on GTX 970). Some of these GTX 980 and GTX 970 graphics cards should be already available directly from EVGA while other, should be available in a couple of weeks.

EVGA will also offer a free five warranty for the Geforce GTX 980 and GTX 970 graphics cards as well as a limited deal of free backplate with select Geforce GTX 970 graphics cards purchased before October 20th.

You can check out EVGA's full Geforce GTX 980 and GTX 970 lineup over at EVGA's website.

As was the case with some of previous Nvidia graphics cards, EVGA has now launched a total of four GTX 750 Ti and four GTX 750 graphics cards based on Nvidia's new Maxwell GPU.

In case you missed it earlier, both the GTX 750 Ti and the GTX 750 are based on Nvidia's new GM107 Maxwell GPU and packs 640 CUDA cores and 2GB of GDDR5 memory for the GTX 750 Ti and 512 CUDA cores and 1GB of GDDR5 memory for the GTX 750, and will feature same 128-bit memory interface as well as the same reference 1020MHz base and 1085MHz GPU Boost clocks.

EVGA's GTX 750 Ti lineup includes the standard GTX 750 Ti, GTX 750 Ti SuperClocked, GTX 750 Ti with ACX cooler and the GTX 750 Ti FTW with ACX cooler and the same thing goes for the GTX 750 as well. While the standard GTX 750 Ti works at 1020MHz base and 1085MHz GPU Boost clocks and comes with 2GB of GDDR5 memory clocked at 5400MHz, the GTX 750 Ti FTW with ACX cooler will have "slightly" higher 1189MHz GPU base, 1268MHz GPU Boost clocks while the 2GB of GDDR5 memory will remain at reference 5400MHz. The EVGA GTX 750 Ti Superclocked works at 1176MHz base and 1255MHz GPU Boost clocks while the standard GTX 750 Ti with ACX cooler works at 1059MHz base and 1137MHz GPU boost clocks.

The standard EVGA GTX 750 works at reference clocks which is the same as on the EVGA GTX 750 with ACX cooler, 1020/1085MHz for the GPU and 5012MHz for the 1GB of GDDR5 memory. The GTX 750 Superclocked will work at 1215MHz for the base and 1294MHz for the GPU Boost clock while the GTX 750 FTW with ACX cooler will end up at 1229MHz base and 1320MHz GPU Boost clocks.

All eight new graphics cards are currently listed as coming soon so we will have to wait a bit longer for the official pricing. You can check out the full lineup here.

EVGA has announced no less than six different GTX 780 Ti graphics cards with various clocks and three different coolers.

The reference desinged GTX 780 Ti from EVGA will include a standard one, with reference 876MHz base and 928MHz GPU Boost clocks as well as the GTX 780 Ti Superclocked which will be factory overclocked up to 980MHz for the base and 1046MHz for the GPU Boost clock. Both cards will feature the same 3072MB of GDDR5 memory paired up with a 384-bit memory interface and clocked at reference 7000MHz.

EVGA has also announced three different graphics cards that will feature its own ACX dual-fan cooler, including reference clocked one, Superclocked and the Dual Classified version. The EVGA GTX 780 Ti Superclocked with ACX cooler will be clocked at rather impressive 1006MHz for the base and 1072MHz for the GPU Boost clock. Unfortunately, the clocks for the Dual Classified ACX version will be announced at a later date.

The last but not the least is the EVGA GTX 780 Ti Dual Classified with EVGA Hydro Copper water cooler. As it was the case with the Dual Classified ACX, there are no informations regarding the clocks on this one either but EVGA did reveal that both will feature 14+3-phase design, dual BIOS feature as well as 8+8-pin PCI-Express power connectors, suggesting that it will have an impressive factory-overclock or plenty of room for additional overclock.

As most other Nvidia AIB partners, EVGA also launched a couple of new graphics cards based on the Nvidia Geforce GTX 760 design. To be precise, EVGA actually launched and announced a total of eight different cards, three with ACX cooler and five with the standard blower-style cooler.

The ACX cooled lineup will include the Geforce GTX w/ ACX cooling, GTX 760 Superclocked w/ ACX cooling and the GTX 760 4GB FTW w/ ACX cooling that will launch at a later date. The blower style cooled cards include two standard GTX 760 cards with reference and EVGA blower coolers, GTX 760 4GB one as well as FTW and Superclocked graphics cards.

While most of them are left at reference 980MHz base and 1033MHz Boost GPU clocks as well as 6008MHz for 2GB or 4GB of GDDR5 memory paired up with a 256-bit memory interface, the Superclocked and the FTW version feature a decent factory overclock. The Superclocked version works at 1072MHz base and 1137MHz Boost GPU clocks while memory was left at reference 6008MHz. The FTW version on the other hand will be available with 4GB of memory and works at 1085MHz base and 1150MHz Boost GPU clocks.